Don’t Tell

I know, I haven’t been keeping up with my storymatic prompts as promised! But here’s a new haphazardly thrown together one!

The cards were “teller of secrets” and “what was that sound?”


          Andrea considered herself a little bit of a real life gossip girl, or maybe a real life Harriet the Spy. It was less of a blog and more of a social media account. And mostly it was pictures – she was just adept enough at stalking and snooping that she always managed to grab the best pics to really get the rumor mill running. It wasn’t a big town, they only had the one high school, but her follower list included nearly every resident of their city excepting the people that didn’t have social media. No one knew it was her, and it made her feel a little important every time people talked about it. She reveled in it, sometimes wishing she could reveal herself, but she knew it was best to never divulge the truth to anyone – she had told so many of her fellow student’s secrets, and everyone would hate her.

          Andrea was currently in the middle of looking into a really fun story she had picked up on – of the most popular couple in school, it was possible the girl was cheating. It might not even be true, but if Andrea could capture an image that suggested it was… and if it did turn out to be true, all the better.

          She was hanging out under the bleachers, half listening to the game and half listening to the girl in question talk to her best friend. But something kept catching her attention. It was almost like a creaking noise. She had heard it a few times and brushed it off as the shifting of the bleachers under the weight of the spectators. But the sound grew louder, loud enough to scare her. She studied the way the bleachers shifted above her and concluded they weren’t the source of the noise.

          But what was it? Ever curious, she followed the sound. At first it got fainter, so she turned back, playing a strange game of hot and cold as she attempted to narrow down where it was coming from. She finally found an especially dark corner, the creaking so fast and persistent that it sounded like a strange purr. She squinted, trying to see if she could spot what was making the noise.

          Something in the shadows shifted, turning. Bright glowing yellow eyes stared at her out of the darkness. The creaking stopped. Andrea drew in a deep breath, but before she could utter a single sound, it had jumped forward – she only had the nightmare visage of teeth glinting in the dim lights, inside of a mouth that came down to cover her head completely.

          For a moment she thought the blackness was death, but then she realized she was still there, alive, somewhere in that darkness. She felt the sudden burning sensation where the many teeth dug through her clothes and into her skin, and she tried to scream, but no sound came out. She tried to struggle but she was held firmly in place. A large, slimy tongue ran over her face, and she felt something like an intense burning pressure within her head…

          The sensation ended suddenly, the humid atmosphere of the creature’s gaping maw withdrawing, and Andrea found herself gasping in a whole lung full of clean, crisp night air. She tried to scream, but no sound came out. She twisted her head, trying to see where the creature was, but the whole of her vision was still a deep black. The world was strangely quiet. She ran blindly…

****

          “What do you think happened?” Andrea’s mother was distraught, looking at her daughter where she lay in the hospital bed.

          The doctor shook his head. “We have no clue. The damage is extensive – her eyes are gone, and all the internal organs of the ear are melted, damaged beyond repair. Her vocal chords are severed. The teeth marks make it look like an animal attack, but the residue left in the eye sockets and the ear canal almost suggests an acid was used. It almost looks like it was done on purpose. Do you know if anyone would have had a grudge against your daughter?”

          Andrea’s mother shook her head, staring absently into space, hardly able to comprehend. “Andrea doesn’t bother anyone. She keeps mostly to herself. What kind of monster would do this to a girl?”

Playtest

The cards for this week were: video game tester, and wrong number.

It went kind of Ring’ish, I guess, with no reason or explanation, and then ends kind of abruptly and vaguely. You can choose whether you think it means Lacey is just dreaming or if she died. Some people hate those kinds of stories, but I always liked them. Having the uncertainty is sometimes the point.

That being said, I didn’t handle it very well here, and it feels less like chilling uncertainty and more like hot garbage. You’re welcome?


          The game premise was simple enough, based off a famous urban legend with some slight variation to it. In it, you are a house-sitter for a wealthy man. The mansion is out far enough that you have no cellphone signal, and you keep receiving mysterious phone calls on the house’s landline. The person on the other end claims to be in the house. At first you don’t believe him, but strange things keep happening and the caller keeps mentioning things specific to you and your location and the things you have seen in the house.

          Moving about the house and figuring out the character of the wealthy homeowner from the items within is interesting. It’s also a good way to learn about the character you play from their commentary and reactions to the things in the house. The atmosphere eventually builds to panic when you realize the landline is an internal phone system for businesses and doesn’t even dial out, so you can’t reach the police or call for help. Eventually you learn that the caller IS the wealthy man, and that he is a serial killer that specifically hires people that won’t be missed to watch his house so he can terrify and murder them.

          It was a casual Indie game that Lacey had been playing for the past few days. Not entirely out of fun alone – she was being paid to test it. She carefully notated all the bugs she found and provided extensive feedback on the atmosphere and story of the game. It wasn’t very long, and she played through many times, allowing her character to fail at different points throughout the game to test the multiple endings.

          It was tedious work, but Lacey liked tedium, and she was easily absorbed. Because of that, she jumped when her phone rang. Glancing at it, she saw that she didn’t recognize the number calling. Robocaller, she decided, and sent the call straight to voicemail. As she settled in to play again, the phone rang once more – displaying the same number. Wondering if it was something important, Lacey picked up the call. “Is Viola there?” the voice on the other end asked.

          Lacey paused, a little startled. Viola was the name of the character in the game she was testing. She glanced at the number again, wondering if she would recognize it as someone associated with the game. Maybe they were messing with her?
          “No,” she said, “I’m sorry, you’ve got the wrong number.”

          “I really don’t think I do.”

          Lacey frowned, feeling her temper rise. Who the fuck had the nerve to say something like that? How do you call someone and then argue with them about whether you have the right number or not? “Pretty sure you do, buddy. There’s no Viola here.” And she hung up.

          The phone rang immediately. The same number. Lacey blocked it so they couldn’t call her, and set her phone back down, ready to return to work. If it was the designer messing with her, he wasn’t clever OR funny. He could email her later if he had anything important to say. After all, the only game she was hired to play was the one running on her computer right now.

          The phone rang again.

          Lacey frowned at the display, which now read, “PRIVATE.”

          Hesitantly, she picked up the phone. “Hello?”

          “Listen Viola, it’s rude to hang up on people.”

          With a sigh, Lacey hung up and switched her phone to silent. It began to vibrate with another incoming call, and she ignored it. However, after going to voicemail each time, it would immediately begin vibrating again.

          Distracted and annoyed, Lacey took her phone in to her bedroom and plugged it in to charge. Then she went back to her computer desk in the den to continue working, thankfully out of ear shot of the constant vibration of the phone.

          She was able to focus on her work in this way for the next half hour when her doorbell rang. She sat for a long moment, wondering if this had something to do with the phone call. Her arrangement play testing the game had been made entirely online – there had been no reason to share her location with the game designer. There was no way it could have been him.

          She went to check her phone, to see if someone had texted that they were coming over. She had missed 74 calls, with no voicemails left. Frowning, Lacey used the app on her phone to check through the doorbell camera – although it had registered being pushed, it had not registered anyone approaching the door at all.

          No one was there.

          As she stared at the emptiness at her door, her doorbell rang again. The app pinged her on her phone, alerting her to the doorbell ring.

          Annoyed and wondering if the thing was malfunctioning somehow, she went to the door. She hesitated one moment before opening it, glancing down at the live video again to see that no one was there. She opened the door.

          No one.

          She sighed with relief, then moved out onto the porch. It whistled, catching her movement. She examined the doorbell to see if anything was sticking, and pushed it a few times to be sure, but it all looked to be working correctly. She closed the door behind her, and waited several moments, standing just inside her home.

          There were no phone calls. The doorbell didn’t ring.

          Relieved, Lacey returned to the game. As she sat down, she saw that the screen had gone dark in her absence. She wiggled the mouse, and the screen returned, showing the serial killer of the game standing in front of her character’s POV – it was so unexpected that she jumped, then laughed at her reaction nervously. “Hello, Viola,” the character said, smiling at her. “Or should I say, Lacey?”

          “What the fuck?” Lacey said, mildly bemused. And then he leaned forward, reaching for her – reaching right through the screen, his hand mere centimeters from her face. “What the fuck!?” Lacey screamed now, loud, shoving back so hard in shock that she tipped her computer chair over in the process and went sprawling across the floor. She groaned in pain as she struggled to right herself and crawl away, but she was too late. He was there. With her. In the room.

          She screamed again, wondering vaguely if this was a dream, hoping that she would wake.

          And then she screamed no more.

Little Star

The cards for this one were: teenager, and garage sale.


              It had been a boring summer for Tim. They had just moved to a new town, so he didn’t have any local friends yet, and his mom’s new job had her working nights, so she didn’t want him playing games in the house while she slept. Apparently even with the headset on, he yelled too much and too loud, and after the first week of summer he had been banned from touching his game systems until after 4 pm when she was awake. Instead, he spent his days riding around on his bike, exploring the nearby neighborhoods.

              This town didn’t have straightforward streets. Instead of blocks laid out in easy to navigate squares, the roads looped and twisted, sometimes creating a detour from a main street threading through the entire neighborhood, only to return to that very same street. Or occasionally they ended in dead ends and cul-de-sacs. It made navigating hard and he had gotten turned around several times.

              Still, some degree of backtracking could get him home, and he always had his phone in his pocket, so he never felt truly lost. He found as fascinating as it was stupid, and he enjoyed riding around to see how lost he could get.

              The neighborhood he was in now was strange. A lot of the houses looked empty with overgrown yards and dark windows. He didn’t see any cars around, which he considered strange. Moments ago he had been in a normal neighborhood, the sunlight bright, the summer greenery vibrant. There were cars parked in driveways or on the street, and he could spot people going about their business, occasionally returning his waves. The sun still shone, but somehow seemed to lack the warmth it had moments ago. The trees gave an oppressing atmosphere, and the colors all seemed muted here.

              He considered turning around when he finally spotted a few cars ahead, and some stuff piled in front of one of the houses. Riding closer in curiosity, he recognized it as a garage sale. The garage door was open, and the person running the garage sale (an ancient woman with curly white hair, sitting in a plastic outdoor chair and wearing sunglasses and a straw hat, white slacks and a floral blouse) sat in the shade just inside, tables set up in her driveway. A few people poked around at the contents of the sale.

              Tim rode up and dropped his bike on the grass at the edge of the driveway. He walked through, glancing at the items on display. He hadn’t brought any money with him, but he loved poking around yard sales and seeing what people had decided to toss out. He loved second-hand stores for the same reason – everything there was something with history. Some of it was quite normal – books with yellowing paper and broken spines, an assortment of clothes. Some of it was a little bizarre. Trinkets and decorations of a macabre sort – skulls, crystals, and taxidermied animals. He glanced up at the old woman running the sale, sitting so still that he wondered if she was even awake. Or even alive. He couldn’t imagine her being the sort to own items like this, and tried to imagine where they had come from.  Did they belong to children who had grown and moved away and left their juvenile gothic obsessions behind?

              One particular item caught his eye. A little keepsake box, shaped like a pirate’s chest. He studied the intricate designs on it for several moments, lifting it to get a good view of all sides. It was heavy, and he knew it wasn’t empty because he could feel objects shifting inside. He popped the latch on the front of it and pushed the lid up. Inside were little pieces of glinting black stone – shaped like stars, small grooves decorating and accentuating their shapes.

              They were fascinating. He wished he had brought some money. He set the little chest back down on the table, poking at the contents within, and felt a sudden sharp pinprick of pain. He pulled his hand up to see a small bead of blood welling on a fingertip. Popping his finger into his mouth, he glanced up to see that the people in the garage sale had nearly cleared out. One man was pulling away in his truck, and the last remaining shopper besides him (a young woman) was currently speaking to the old woman (apparently less than dead), purchasing a couple of things she had found. It was hard to tell since the old woman was wearing sunglasses, but Tim was certain he wasn’t being observed for the moment.

              He felt compelled to quickly slip one single star into his palm, then deposited it into his pocket and closed the small chest. He turned and walked back to his bike. Once on his bike, he pedaled away, not daring to look back over his shoulder in case the guilt of the moment was plain on his face.

              He backtracked along the way he had come in. It was getting to be later in the afternoon, and he wanted to get back home to AC and XBOX, so he went relatively fast. Still, the quiet, empty neighborhood seemed to stretch further than he remembered. Annoyed, he stood on his pedals and leaned over the handles, pushing forward like he was in a race.

              Just ahead, he saw a familiar woman walk to a car, and quickly pull away from the curb. His jaw dropped as he slowed, staring at the garage sale as he coasted by it. The old woman was still seated there, barely acknowledging his presence.

              He stopped just past her house. He turned and looked back. Yes, it was the same place, the same sale laid out on the same driveway, the same old lady in sunglasses and floral sitting just inside the garage. Had he somehow gotten turned around so bad that he had looped back around completely? Starting down the street again, he decided to follow a different route than he had moments before.

              Before he knew it, he saw the tables in the driveway and found himself coasting by the house again. He frowned hard, staring at the house as he passed it. What was going on? He had taken a completely different route that time and had still ended up in the same destination. He stopped and pulled his phone out, to pull up a map and see if it would pinpoint his position on it.

              He frowned at his phone’s dark screen, furiously mashed at the buttons he knew would boot it up if it had somehow completely shut down. Nothing happened. He had completely charged his phone before leaving home, and finding it dead and useless now felt wrong. In fact, everything about this felt wrong.

              Frowning back at the old woman, like maybe she had somehow caused this, he balanced back on his bike and took off again.

              This time it took a little longer, but soon the garage sale came into sight again. He stopped well before he even saw the woman sitting just inside her garage. Someone else had arrived and was poking around at the items. He decided to wait to see if he could follow them on their way out of this neighborhood. He balanced on his bike, shifting his weight from one side to the other in boredom as he waited for the person to finish looking and climb back into his car. The man started the engine and pulled away from the curb, and Tim followed along behind, not bothering to look at the house or the woman or the sale.

              He never fell behind or lost sight of the car. Instead it was like it vanished from thin air. He came to a halt, his jaw dropping as he stared. Then carefully, slowly, he biked forward, waiting to see if he passed through something too, but there was nothing – no unexplained portal, nothing strange that he could see. Just regular space.

              He continued slowly, his stomach churning with dread at what he knew he would see soon. And sure enough, just ahead – the familiar tables came into sight.

              He stopped and dropped his bike where he had left it the previous time, and approached the woman timidly. It was the only thing he could think of to free him from this. He fished in his pocket for the strange stone star. “Ma’am,” he said morosely, holding the small dark shape out to her in his open palm. “I’m sorry I took this. I think I need to return it.”

              He could see his hand reflected in the sunglasses. For a moment, he wasn’t certain she was going to respond, but suddenly she gasped and reached out, gently folding his hand around the star instead of taking it from him. “Oh my, that wasn’t supposed to be out here,” she said, standing and walking out to the table in the carefully measured steps of the elderly. He watched in dumbfounded confusion as she picked up the little chest carefully, holding it close to herself before turning around to walk back to him. “Did you feed it blood?” she asked.

              Tim thought about the pinprick on his finger, the small drop of blood. He didn’t think any had dropped into the chest, but he wasn’t really sure. “I think… maybe?”

              “Oh, boy. Oh, child,” she said, her voice quite sad. “I’m so so sorry.”

              The feeling of alarm started to grow in Tim’s chest. “Why?” he asked.

              “I’m so sorry,” the woman repeated, opening the chest so it faced him. Tim stared, mouth agape, as he watched what was happening to him reflected in the glossy surface of the woman’s sunglasses. It was like his shape had lost its form and was swirling toward a single point. Looking down, he could see that everything about him seemed to focus on what was in his hand – the star, glowing brightly now, pulled him in.

********

              Gladys carefully reached out with the open box. She knew that if she waited too long, the star would finish consuming the boy’s soul and fall to the ground, and she hated touching the things. So much risk, so many sharp edges and points if one wasn’t careful. Better to simply swipe it out of the air while it still floated. She closed the lid down around it and carefully latched the box, then carried it back into the house. She hated to leave her garage sale unattended, but this was more important. If they were awake and seeking blood, it was important to put them to sleep again.

The Incident on Cherry Street

Cards I pulled this time: “interview” and “person with lots and lots of cats.” Certainly this would be a comedy too, I thought to myself when I initially pulled the cards.

Well, apparently not. Some imaginary cats were harmed in the making of this story, so you may be upset if you read further.


            The town in question is a sleepy Southern municipality, small and quiet, a town that rarely sees anything more dramatic than the occasional robbery. There are only 8 police officers employed by the town, so in the interest of the privacy of all involved, the exact location will not be named.

            The individual that I’m talking to today is a man in his late 40s, easily towering over everyone in the diner at 6’4 and 246 pounds. He (almost stereotypically) wears an enviously thick mustache, and settles into the bench. After we make some small talk through the meal, I settle my recorder (with permission) on the table between us and prepare to take notes on my tablet.    

            “So, what can you tell me about what occurred on March 29th of last year,” I begin.

            “Getting right into it, huh?” He chuckles nervously and shifts in his seat, and begins. “It was a slow day – they’re mostly slow days here – and we got a call from a young woman asking that we perform a wellness check on her mother. Apparently her mother lived alone and the daughter was from out of state. She hadn’t heard from the lady in a week at that point, and was getting worried. Didn’t know the neighbors, so called us. So my partner and I went down to check on her.

            “No one answered the door, and a curious neighbor wandered by to see what we were up to as we circled the house to look through the windows. When we asked her about the lady that lived there, she said that no one ever saw her. Was a bit of a recluse. Owned a lot of cats. Always had her cat supplies delivered by some pet website. Even when we were there, the boxes were piled on the porch – all with the blue logo for the pet site.

            “We asked the neighbor how long she had left the boxes there, and the neighbor shrugged. Said it wasn’t unusual for her to leave boxes out on the porch for days, sometimes weeks at a time. They never saw her retrieve them – it was like she waited until no one was around to sneak out for her stuff. Even while we walked around the house, we could hear the cats, could see some sitting in the windows, meowing. Could practically smell them, even from outside.” He pauses for a moment to pull a face at the memory of the stench.

            “Partner and I argued on what to do for a bit. Since the daughter hadn’t heard from her, and no one had seen her, and owing to the boxes, we could claim exigent circumstances to force our way in, to make sure she was all right. I’m not a big fan of cats, didn’t want to go in, especially since we could already smell it. Inside had to be worse. I was reluctant, so we tried calling the daughter to get an okay to enter the property, but couldn’t reach her. But since calls to the local hospital had already been made before we got to the property, my partner was getting annoyed at my hemming and hawing. He went to prepare to break the door open, when the neighbor suggested we try opening it first. It wasn’t even locked.” He chuckles again.

            “So the neighbor stayed through the entire thing?”

            “She was curious, I think, and we weren’t expecting danger. So yeah, we let her stay.” He shrugs, then continues. “The smell hit us with a blast of warm air. It was a rainy March day, so it was fairly cool outside, the weather had been jumping between spring like and winter like the past week. That day was more winter like. So the heat inside the house was easy to feel, and it was possible a lot of people had turned their heaters on that day. Several cats rushed out and took off running, and I remember my partner cussing, but we weren’t there for the cats so I told him to focus. We went inside, calling out the woman’s name. Jacques. ‘Mrs. Jacques, are you here? This is the police. Your daughter sent us because she’s worried. If you can talk, please answer us.’

            “Nothing. All we could hear was the cats – cats hissing, and scratching things, and meowing. The pattering of paws across the floor. The smell was awful – like piss and shit. The carpet squelched when I stepped on it. I remember my partner taking his first step in and lifting his foot with a look of disgust on his face and going, ‘You fucking kidding me?’ I already wanted a shower, but we had a job to do.

            “It was dark inside, and the lights weren’t working when I tried to flip the switch. I turned on my flashlight, shone it around the living room – it was a mess, but none of the mess looked like it was hiding a woman. We walked back into the kitchen, also a mess, still no sign of the occupant. Made our way down a hallway.

            “And that’s where it got kind of weird. That hallway stretched. It wasn’t endless, but it felt like it was a lot longer than the house had looked from the outside. My partner and I walked down the hall, opening each door we came to and checking inside. A bathroom that was clear. A couple of bedrooms that were clear. And then that weirdly long stretch of hallway down to a last door.”

            “Where was the neighbor at that point?”

            “Julie. I remember she said her name was Julie, and I… learned it after. She had made a face at the stench and stayed on the porch, bouncing on the balls of her feet as she watched us walk into the house. Seemed like the anxious sort, kind of pretty, but young. Maybe closer to my partner’s age.” He pauses for a moment, his eyes taking on a distant look for a moment.

            When he doesn’t speak for a bit, I ask, “What happened next?”

            Coming back to the present, he continues his story. “We walked down the hall, reached the door about the same time something was scratching on the other side. Called for Mrs. Jacques again while opening the door. The other side was… it wasn’t quite a room.”

            “What do you mean by that?”

            He hesitates. “It looked like a jungle. It could have been a room. Maybe Jacques was just really into house plants, and had filled the room up with broad leafy things. Scratching at the door frame was another cat. But it looked strange. Bigger than a normal cat. Its features a little… off. Like that stupid cat from Alice in Wonderland, with the large smile. This fucker was all smiles.” He shudders for a moment. “Even my partner, he said, ‘What the fuck kinda cat is that?’

            “We walked further into the room, having to push the plants out of our way. I remember hearing crickets, like the room was infested with them. I was starting to get spooked. There was no way this house had this much space. I remember tripping on a vine and falling into the dirt – it was dirt, actual fucking ground. It was like we weren’t in a house at all. I remember scratching my fingers through it, hoping to feel a floor underneath, and as I was standing I was telling my partner maybe we should leave, but I was cut off by the growling.”

            “Growling?”

            “Yeah. It was low at first, a weird sort of screechy growl. Like a mountain lion or jaguar. I was on my feet pretty fast, had a hand on my gun, I was fucking spooked. The jungle… the room… wherever we were, it was dark and hot, humid. It was like suddenly I was noticing all these shiny lights amongst the plants. I realized I saw some blink. They were eyes. Hundreds of eyes, watching us. My partner and I stood dumbfounded for a moment, then looked at each other, then back at the jungle. And then we booked it.

            “We got back to the door and tried to slam it behind us, but it didn’t latch proper and instead bounced back open. We didn’t care, we just wanted out. Julie was at the end of the hall, practically standing on tiptoes to avoid stepping fully on the carpet, looking at us with wide eyes as we barreled right at her. She lost her balance and fell right on her ass, making an audible squish on the carpet. I remember her going ‘ewwww!’ really long and drawn out, it would have been funny if I wasn’t scared shitless.

            “I didn’t really stop, I stepped out into the fresh air outside, really wanting the stench out of my nose and to be separate from the house. I think my partner stopped to help her up though. I didn’t think much of it until I heard the screaming.”

            I pause for a moment. “The… screaming?”

            He nods, very solemnly. “Julie… and my partner. And the cats. Like everything in the house went crazy at once. I turned to see what was happening, and there was something there, in the doorway. It was cat-like… and big… but not like a big cat. No, something more strangely hulking, misshapen. A shadow of whispers and hisses and angry yowling, and blinking eyes. I pulled my gun and started firing into the doorway at it.”

            He looks down at the table, his expression sad, full of shame. “In my wild firing, I struck both Julie Dodgson and my partner, Jim Barnes, as they were attempting to exit the house. I shot her twice, and him about three times. I called for an ambulance, and pulled them both away from the house, where the cats were all still screaming and meowing. I began first aid as immediately as possible. It didn’t help. They both died before paramedics arrived.”

            I nod sympathetically. “And then you were relieved of duty.”

            “Forced into an early retirement of sorts. The courts are still sorting out whether to charge me with murder or manslaughter since there was no discernable reason for me to use my firearm during a wellness check, but I’m out on bail for the moment, granted that I don’t leave the county. Mrs. Jacques was never seen, and everyone that entered the house afterward described it different from how my partner and I saw it. Just a normal two bedroom, one bathroom home, an absolute wreck, but no third room full of plants, no fucking jungle. Place was packed with cats though, lady must’ve been a cat hoarder – upwards of 60 or so was the final count. I adopted one of the healthier kittens that was eventually put forward, for my daughter. She loves cats. They needed a good home after all that shit.” He takes a sip of his sweet tea, still avoiding eye contact.

            I pause a moment, waiting to see if he mentions anything else, before saying, “The house burned down recently. They think someone set the fire on purpose.”

            He shrugs. “Place was probably scheduled to be demolished anyway. No way anyone was ever getting it clean enough to live in again.”

            “It was, actually. Scheduled to be demolished. So it would have been destroyed sooner or later. The daughter didn’t even try to claim the house or anything in it when her mom never turned up.”

            “See? Who cares if it got scorched then. No other property was damaged.” He must read something in my expression, because he looks suddenly annoyed. “Look, it wasn’t me. I’ve already got enough on my plate with a potential murder charge, they might just decide I’m cuckoo for cocoa puffs based on the report I filed. Why would I stack arson on top of all of that? But whoever did burn it down didn’t do anything bad. There was something wrong about that place, something evil inside of it. Maybe the other neighbors were just as aware of it. Maybe someone didn’t want any of that shit leaking out or coming through.”

            “Yes, of course you wouldn’t want to get into any more trouble.” I pay for the meals, and finish up. He’s agitated and I don’t want to get into a more heated confrontation with someone that is out on bail for having killed two innocent individuals, whether it was in a lapse of sanity or a tragic accident. As I’m saying goodbye, I ask how the kitten is doing.

            “Full of life, literally climbs up the walls. Daughter loves it.” He shrugs as if to say its not his cup of tea.

            “You don’t suppose anything about that house got out through the rescued cats, do you?” The question is out before I really think it through. He gives me an odd, thoughtful look, but just shrugs and mumbles that they’re just cats.

            I feel like I’ve just sat down to a pointless interview. I was hoping that he would let something slip or tell a different story than what appeared in his official report, but he’s stayed true to all of it, down to the last detail. If he suffered a delusion of some sort, he’s been very committed to it. I visit the site where the house stood. While I’m poking about the ruins, I noticed that there’s a white circle just outside of the rubble, disturbed by time and weather but still mostly visible. I scratch at some where it runs over the concrete path that once led to the small house on Cherry street, lift it to my mouth and lick it briefly – salt. Before someone burned the house, they circled it in salt, like they were trying to make sure the evil stayed in.

            As mentioned, it’s not a very large town. As I’m walking back to the diner where I left my vehicle parked, I hear screaming. Curious, I loop into the parking lot of a nearby apartment complex to see the man that I had just spoken to stomping across the parking lot towards the dumpster. A teenage girl is following him, screaming at him and cussing him out, tears streaming down her face.

            I watch in shock as he callously tosses the limp body of a cat into the trash.

No Place to Hide

I’ve decided I’m going to try to update on Tuesdays with writing shorts, either using the writing prompt questions that WordPress has available or using the Storymatic cards to prompt a short story. I’m not entirely following the official Storymatic rules – because let’s face it, it’s fun to break the rules. I’m pulling only a couple of cards because I don’t intend to get carried away – all of these stories or posts will be no longer than the average flash fiction. As such, I am pulling one character card and one story card each and running with those.

Today’s prompt includes the following cards: a world record holder, and no place to hide.


              Alice loved the water. She had taken to it like a fish since infancy, had specifically sought out a high school with a good swim team, but eventually found her own niche passion within competitive apnea. She had spent years training herself in freediving, both in pools and in the ocean, with one idea lodged firmly in her head: to break the Guiness World Record for holding one’s breath. As a woman, she had to pass the female record of 18 minutes and 32.59 seconds, but she desperately wanted to prove herself even against the men’s record.

              When she finally made the attempt, she fell short of the men’s record, but did still manage 21 minutes and 22.1 seconds under the water. She remembered the euphoric feeling of knowing that she would now be the goal – that anyone and everyone within her field of competition and interest would know her name, would know that she was the one to surpass. This was a triumph.

              That had been a year and a half ago. She still trained, though not with the same single-minded determination that had driven her before she had achieved her dream. Mostly she trained in case someone managed to break her record, and she relished in the idea of the challenge, but none had managed it so far. Like any other day, she decided to swim in the ocean, and had taken her boat out far from the shore.

              As she prepared for her dive, she scanned the horizon. The sea was calm, and it was a beautiful day, the sort of conditions that always made her feel at peace and in touch with her world. But today seemed somehow different. A strange unsettling began somewhere in the pit of her stomach and raised goosebumps across her flesh. But she had already come out this far and was certain that being in the water would make everything seem right again. Ignoring the feeling, she carefully placed her goggles over her eyes and slipped under the waves.

              She swam down, intending to go as deep as she was able, but the feeling persisted. Something was wrong here. She turned in the water, looking through the depths – the way the distance disappeared in greenish blue usually calmed her, but today it looked somehow darker, murkier. Foreign? Perhaps this was a bad idea after all. She decided to float upward to return to her boat.

              Strangely, her slow descent never seemed to bring her closer to the surface. She frowned, staring at what she felt was up, but it was hard to make out where the water might meet the sky. She quelled her panic and continued, but several moments later, much longer than the time she had taken swimming down, she still hadn’t broken the surface of the water.

              Movement caught her eye. She turned to look, could see a dark shape lurking just beyond comprehension. More movement, from the other side. Four glowing dots seemed to grow out of the gloom, approaching until she realized they were the eyes of some strange massive fish. The ocean was full of mysterious and terrifying things, but she had never seen anything quite like it before. More alarming, it seemed to be stalking her, waiting just out of reach for something to happen.

              She kept her eyes on it as she continued upward. There was nowhere to reasonably hide, and she didn’t want to thrash or panic like a prey animal – instead, she forced herself to keep her movements steady. Besides, despite her world record, or maybe entirely because of it, she knew she did not have much more time before she couldn’t hold her breath anymore. She nearly boggled at the sight of the second creature as it rose from the depths, this one with a white skeletal looking face full of sharp exposed teeth, a dull blue glow emitting from the depths of the eye sockets. What were these things? Where were they coming from?

              They followed her on her slow and completely exposed journey up.

              Her lungs ached and white flashes of light painfully pulsed behind her eyes, almost obscuring the sight of the third creature from the depths – a long flowing inky shadow of tendrils and arms lined with glowing lights of a color that she couldn’t place or even begin to understand, a color she could only describe as oceanic death. It was larger than the other two, both of which pulled back at its approach.

              Panic welling and building to a crescendo, she struggled hard, pulling her arms against the water and kicking, feeling her body rise quickly, but despite that, the surface still never came. She realized she was reaching her limit – had maybe even surpassed her own record. She was out of breath, and out of strength, and out of consciousness. The world darkened as the inky black of the creature surrounded her, and the last cohesive thought that crossed her mind was that she could just barely make out the glistening of pearly teeth…